
Daniil Donchenko tried to replicate 'TUF 33' house experience for UFC 319 final
Donchenko (11-2 MMA, 0-0 UFC) meets Rodrigo Sezinando (8-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC) in the Season 33 welterweight final of "The Ultimate Fighter." Their fight takes place on the preliminary card at United Center in Chicago. At media day, Donchenko took questions from media members before his "TUF" finale fight.
The 24-year-old Ukrainian fighter said he's trying to replicate his experience in the house now that fight week has arrived – so he didn't get the full experience of having everyone hit him up once the MMA world knew he was a "TUF" finalist.
"I deleted my Instagram for fight week," Donchenko told MMA Junkie on Wednesday at his media day. "I tried to put myself to the position I was in the house – without phone, without (everything). It was the best time. You could stay with yourself. (I was) in the best shape. I tried to keep it (like that for fight week)."
Check out Donchenko's full media day interview in the video above.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Kamaru Usman picks former foe Khamzat Chimaev to dethrone Dricus Du Plessis at UFC 319
Kamaru Usman expects Khamzat Chimaev to test Dricus Du Plessis' grappling like never before. Du Plessis (23-2 MMA, 9-0 UFC) will look to notch his third title defense when he takes on Chimaev (14-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) in Saturday's UFC 319 (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) main event at United Center in Chicago. Former UFC welterweight champion Usman is not surprised that Chimaev is a favorite over Du Plessis, and sees him living up to his championship potential. "Don't forget, DDP hasn't really fought a wrestler since Derek Brunson," Usman said on his "Pound 4 Pound" podcast with Henry Cejudo. "We saw how that looked in the first couple of rounds. Derek eventually gassed out and DDP does what he does best. DDP will not give up. That's what we love about him. He will not give up. DDP will continue to try. If DDP continues to try, and if Khamzat Chimaev hasn't done his work with that cardio, then I see DDP definitely turning this one around. But for me, this is a very, very tough one. "I think Khamzat Chimaev might actually go out there and get it done. If you look at the landscape of where we are right now, it's almost like every so often we get a turn, we get a new generation of guys that come out and just become the superstars of the game. You're talking Conor McGregor out of nowhere, the superstars of the game. You're talking about Alexander Volkanovski, Israel Adesanya. You're talking about Ilia Topuria. Now look at the landscape. We've got Tom Aspinall and you've got potentially Khamzat Chimaev." Usman was edged out by Chimaev in a majority decision loss at UFC 294 in October 2023. He took the fight on short notice and up a weight class, but Chimaev's early grappling attack proved to be too much.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Du Plessis vs. Chimaev: How to watch UFC 319, full fight card and more
A middleweight title is on the line this weekend when South African Dricus Du Plessis faces undefeated Russian fighter Khamzat Chimaev at UFC 319 in Chicago. The co-main event on the fight card will be a bout between Lerone Murphy and Aaron Pico. UFC 319 will air live from Chicago's United Center with early prelims scheduled for 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, and the main event on pay-per-view starting at 10 p.m. While you can catch this weekend's action on ESPN and ESPN+, UFC has just signed a new streaming deal with Paramount+, where you'll be able to catch matches starting in 2026. But for now, it's pay-per-view only. Here's everything you need to know about how to watch Du Plessis vs. Chimaev, including the full fight card, schedule and how to watch every bout for a little less. How to watch the Dricus Du Plessis vs. Khamzat Chimaev fight: Date: Saturday, August 16 Start time: Event begins at 6 p.m. ET Fight time (approximate): Main card fights begin at 10 p.m. ET Location: United Center, Chicago TV channel/streaming: PPV via ESPN+ (Main fight card), ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPN+ (Prelims), ESPN+ and UFC Fight Pass (Early prelims) PPV price: $79.99 When is the Dricus Du Plessis vs. Khamzat Chimaev fight? The UFC 319 fight between Dricus Du Plessis and Khamzat Chimaev is this Saturday, August 16 at 10 p.m. ET. What channel is the Dricus Du Plessis vs. Khamzat Chimaev fight on? The UFC 319 fight between Du Plessis and Chimaev will be available through pay-per-view in the US on ESPN+. ESPN+ subscribers can opt to add it on to their monthly plan (click here to see how), and it's a $79.99 add-on to the monthly subscription. You can watch the early preliminary bouts at 6 p.m. on ESPN+ and UFC Fight Pass (subscriptions are available for $9.99/month), while the prelim fights at 8 p.m. ET will be available on ESPN, ESPN2, and ESPN+, and the main event, which begins at 10 p.m. ET will be on ESPN+ PPV only. Where to watch the Dricus Du Plessis vs. Khamzat Chimaev fight: How to watch UFC 319 for less: If you want a way to watch the UFC 319 fight card without shelling out for PPV prices, you can tune in to a UK broadcast for half the price by watching with a VPN on the Discovery+ livestream (subscribe here for £30.99/month). By using a VPN with a location set in England, viewers in the U.S. can tune in to the fight on Discovery+ for less. A VPN (virtual private network) helps protect your data, can mask your IP address and is perhaps most popular for being especially useful in the age of streaming. Whether you're looking to watch Friends on Netflix (which left the U.S. version of the streamer back in 2019) or tune in to overseas cricket or rugby matches that aren't broadcast in the U.S., a VPN can help you out. Looking to try a VPN for the first time? This guide breaks down the best VPN options for every kind of user. UFC 319: Dricus Du Plessis vs. Khamzat Chimaev Full Fight Card Main Card (ESPN+ PPV at 10 p.m. ET) Dricus Du Plessis vs. Khamzat Chimaev – for middleweight title Lerone Murphy vs. Aaron Pico Geoff Neal vs. Carlos Prates Jared Cannonier vs. Michael Page Kai Asakura vs. Tim Elliott Preliminary Card (ESPN/ESPN2/ESPN+ at 8 p.m. ET) Diego Ferreira vs. King Green Gerald Meerschaert vs. Michal Oleksiejczuk Jessica Andrade vs. Loopy Godinez Alexander Hernandez vs. Chase Hooper Early Prelims (ESPN+/UFC Fight Pass at 6 p.m. ET) Edson Barboza vs. Drakkar Klose Bryan Battle vs. Nursulton Ruziboev Dione Barbosa vs. Karine Silva Alibi Idiris vs. Joseph Morales – 'TUF 33' flyweight final TBA – 'TUF 33' welterweight final
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Pity poor Dricus du Plessis, the blameless pariah of UFC 319
Dricus du Plessis got about six words into his first answer to the first question at Thursday's pre-fight press conference to promote Saturday's UFC 319 in Chicago. Then the boos shut him down. This poor guy. We don't say that often about the reigning champion in any combat sport. But my god, the look on his face at first. After a few seconds of this he managed to roll with it, laughing it off and letting the crowd have its fun. But those first moments? When he realized the crowd in Chicago was apparently all the way in the corner of undefeated challenger Khamzat Chimaev and passionately aligned against him? My friends, there was a look of surprise and a little bit of pain on the man's face. And when he decided to set the mic down and see just how committed to this bit the press conference crowd really was, it went nearly a full minute before UFC CEO Dana White spoke up to break the spell. If you're DDP in that moment, don't you have to wonder exactly what it is you ever did to these people? Was it winning his first six UFC fights — five of them inside the distance — before claiming the 185-pound title? Was it beating Sean Strickland twice with a submission win over Israel Adesanya, arguably the best middleweight of the last 10 years, sandwiched in between? Was it continually showing up when called upon, facing all comers and generally refraining from embarrassing the sport the way a few of its most established stars have? Maybe his crime is much simpler than that: He's not Khamzat Chimaev. You might not think that Midwestern fight fans would be all-in for a Chechen boogeyman with an Abe Lincoln beard, but they are. The same appears to be true for much of the UFC fan base as a whole. People love this man of few words, about 25% of which are some combination of 'smash' and 'brother.' He shows up with this malevolent grin, like the neighborhood's most worrisome kid getting ready for another wonderful day of pulling the legs off insects. Every person his eyes fall upon, it's like he's automatically doing the math in his head to determine what it would take to lift them off their feet and move them somewhere unkind. Of course fight fans go for that. How could they not? And the fact that he's felt like a champ in waiting for the last several years only increases the gleeful anticipation now that he's on the eve of finally getting his shot. But poor, poor DDP. All he's done is show up and win and still we refuse to believe in him. Every fight it's the same story. OK, we tell ourselves, he might have won the last one. But this one? Surely this is where it stops. Then he hurks and jerks his way to another victory while looking like an alien who's still learning to work the controls on his human suit and we tell ourselves that's all well and good but the next time he won't be so lucky. But this time. Against the terrifying and undeniable force that is Khamzat the Cruel. This time he's in for it, man. We're sure of it. All of which should force us to stop and ask, purely as a fun little thought experiment: What if that's wrong? What if the guy who's cashed as an underdog in three of his last four fights goes out there on Saturday night and does it again? For one thing, it'll crush the spirits of a lot of those gleeful boo-birds who showed up to the press conference. It will also give him victories over every middleweight we've ever branded as 'elite' since the end of the Anderson Silva era. Maybe (just maybe) it will even force us to treat the man with some damn respect. Because, really, what will there be left to say? What could we possibly hate on him for then? The MMA world is looking at him right now like he's a cow being marched off to a highly entertaining ritualistic sacrifice. If he turns out instead to be a bull that gores his way to bloody freedom, wouldn't we then have to admit that we were wrong? I know we hate doing that. But I just don't see any other choice if du Plessis leaves Chicago with the UFC middleweight title still part of his carry-on luggage. Those same people who dedicated a minute of their lives to shutting the man down with boos on Thursday will owe him an ovation that's at least twice as long if he's still standing on Saturday.